Texas: A new era is underway in Austin, as former Tulane coach and Texas native David Pierce takes over the program after 20 years under Augie Garrido, college baseball’s all-time winningest coach. Pierce inherits a team that went 25-32 last season but should have the talent to compete in the postseason in 2017. The rotation will be the biggest strength, with a trio of prospects in Jr. RHPs Morgan Cooper, Kyle Johnston and Connor Mayes.

West Virginia: The Mountaineers played as well as any team in the conference down the stretch last season and came tantalizingly close to ending a 20-year NCAA tournament drought, losing in the Big 12 tournament title game and then being one of the last teams passed over for an at-large berth. Fifth-year head coach Randy Mazey has steadily built up the program, and his crew will look to take that next step this season.

Notable Storylines: If it’s possible for a conference to collectively have a chip on its shoulder, the Big 12 does after getting just three teams into last year’s NCAA tournament and then having all three reach Omaha. The league has considered increasing the number of conference games each team plays, which would necessitate some teams playing each other twice, in an effort to reduce the number of potentially RPI damaging non-conference games, but it will continue with its current 24-game league schedule in 2017. Coaches around the conference also acknowledge that, as is the case across most Big 12 sports, the league’s perception suffers when Oklahoma and Texas struggle as they have the last couple of seasons . . . Speaking of Oklahoma, the Sooners will look to rebound after floundering to a fifth-place finish in 2016, a season they entered as a Top 25 team. With their two biggest stars of the last three years, shortstop/righthander Sheldon Neuse and righthander Alec Hansen, off to pro ball, the Sooners will count on a core of sophomores—a group that was the 13th ranked recruiting class nationally going into their freshman seasons—like catcher Domenic DeRenzo and outfielder Steele Walker to anchor the lineup, while righthanders Jake Irvin and Dylan Grove need to turn their impressive stuff into results in the rotation . . . Baylor was frisky at times last year in coach Steve Rodriguez’s first season, including its taking a series from TCU. If the Bears are going to take another step in 2017, they’ll need power hitting catcher Shea Langeliers, an unsigned 34th-round pick in last year’s draft, to give a boost to what was the Big 12’s lowest scoring offense last season. Junior college transfer righthander Montana Parsons, an unsigned 30th-round pick himself, will try to do the same in the rotation, along with freshman righthander Jimmy Winston.